BACKGROUND
[0001] This invention relates to stabilization against auto radiolysis of a glucose compound
that incorporates an
18F radioisotope. The stabilized compound is used for diagnostic imaging using Positron
Emission Tomography.
[0002] The
18F isotope-labeled glucose, [
18F] 2-Fluoro-2-Deoxy-D-glucose (hereinafter FDG), has become widely used in nuclear
medicine for diagnostic studies using a Positron Emission Tomography (PET) body scanning
technique. Because of the short half-life of the
18F isotope (109 min), this product must be produced in relatively large quantities
to allow for decay during delivery to the patient from a manufacturing facility. Therefore,
work shifts usually start near midnight with production for distant (via automobile)
hospitals first, followed by that for nearby hospitals in the very early morning.
Typical delivery time can be as long as 5-8 hours. After arrival, there could be another
4 hour delay before use on the last patient. Thus, 8-12 hours can pass from the time
of production to the time of administration to a patient. This is 4.4-6.6 half-lives
and necessitates preparation of initial radioactivity concentrations of 20-100 times
greater than is actually required at the time of administration.
[0003] If prepared in relatively high concentrations, for example, 3.7 GBq/ml (100 mCi/ml)
and higher, radiation-induced decomposition of FDG is observed. This process is referred
to as radiolysis. It is caused mainly by oxidation by free radicals that are produced
by the interaction of ionizing radiation from the
18F isotope with the water solvent and possibly air. These processes may then lead to
the decomposition of FDG, which can be quantified in terms of decreased Radio Chemical
Purity (RCP). RCP is typically expressed as a % of activity in the form of FDG relative
to the total radioactivity present in the sample.
[0004] At the end of production, FDG typically has an RCP of 98-100%, As a result of radiolysis,
some FDG molecules decompose resulting in other than FDG radioactive substances (mainly
free
18F
- ions). As demonstrated by experiments described below, this can lead to a decline
in RCP to less than 90% over a period of less than 12 hours. The quality standard
established by the US Pharmacopoeia (USP) for FDG is "not less than 90% RCP," It is
obviously desirable to retain as high an RCP as possible for as long as possible to
achieve the best PET image quality.
[0005] FDG production comprises synthesis of the
18F labeled compound followed by purification. Synthesis involves an
18F fluorination step which leads to formation of an acetylated derivative of FDG (an
intermediate product) and then a hydrolysis step during which protective acetyl groups
are removed resulting in the final product. The hydrolysis step takes only about 10
minutes, but the concentration of radioactive material is about five times as high
as in the final product leading to significant decomposition of the FDG intermediate
as it is being produced. Decomposition of the intermediate product will not directly
affect the RCP of the final product due to the fact that accumulated radioactive impurities
are removed during the purification step. However, it is important to realize that
any decomposition will result in a lower radiochemical yield. Therefore, it is very
useful to reduce or control radiolysis not only of the final product but also the
intermediate product during hydrolysis.
[0006] For the purpose of distribution and use, the 12 hour storage capability is a practical
requirement. Therefore, RCP after 12 hours or longer is a useful indicator of stabilization
effectiveness.
[0007] In summary, improving the stability of FDG and increasing the RCP at the time of
administration is an important goal for FDG manufacturers. It is also important to
control radiolysis during the FDG production steps to increase radiochemical yield
of the product.
[0008] Production of
18F-labeled FDG is, by now, well, known. Information can be found in: 1)
Fowler et al., 2-Deoxy-2-[18F]Fluoro-D-Glucose for Metabolic Studies: Current Status,"
Applied Radiation and Isotopes, vol. 37, no. 8, 1986, pages 663-668; 2)
Hamacher et al., "Efficient Stereospecific Synthesis of No-Carrier-Added 2-[18F]-Fluom-2-Deoxy-
D-Glucose Using Aminopolyether Supported Nucleophilic Substitution," Journal of Nuclear
Medicine, vol. 27, 1986, pages 235-238; 3)
Coenen et al., "Recommendation for Practical Production of [2-18F]Fluoro-2-Deoxy-D-Glucose,"
Applied Radiation and Isotopes, vol. 38, no. 8, 1987, pages 605-610 (a good review); 4)
Knust et al., "Synthesis of 18F-2-deoxy-2-fluoro-d-glucose and 18F-3-deoxy-3-fuoro-D-glucose
with no-carrier- added 18F-fluoride," Journal of Radioanalytic Nuclear Chemistry,
vo1.132, no. 1, 1989, pages 85+ ; 5)
Hamacher et al., "Computer-aided Synthesis (CAS) of No-carrier-added 2-[18F]Fluoro-2-Deoxy-D-Glucose:
An Efficient Automated System for the Aminopolyether-supported Nucleophilic Fluorination,"
Applied Radiation and Isotopes, vol, 41, no. 1,1990, pages 49-55 and 6)
EP 0 798 307 Al (NKK Plant Engineering Corp. et al.) 01/10/97 for "Fluoro-deoxyglucose synthesizer
using colunms."
[0009] With respect to stabilization of radiopharmaceuticals, European patent
EP 0 462 787 discloses a freeze/thaw technique to preserve the radiopharmaceutical ethylenediamine-tetraehtylenephosphonic
acid (EDTMP) labelled with, for example,
15Sm. Radiometric degradation versus time is compared to solutions containing 0.9% benzyl
alcohol, 5.0% ethanol, and a no-preservation control. The benzyl alcohol solution
delays the start of degradation, after which the rate is moderate. In contrast, even
at the high 5.0% concentration, ethanol delays degradation slightly, but then degradation
proceeds at an even faster rate than the control. Use of other additives to stabilize
various radiopharmaceuticals was discussed in
U.S. patent nos.: 5,384,113 (24.01.95 to Deutsch et al.);
6,027,710 (11.02.00 to Higashi et al.);
6,066,309 (23.05.00 to Zamara et al.) and
6,261,536 (17.07.01 to Zamara et al.),
[0010] Since the PET procedure requires injecting the FDG solution, there is a USP requirement
to keep any ingredient with toxic potential within appropriate limits. Currently,
the allowed dose of the above cited ethanol in the European Pharmacopoeia and USP
is 0.5% (one tenth the concentration used above for EDTMP). Moreover, conformance
requires demonstration by one or more validated limit tests. From a practical standpoint,
it is very desirable to keep the concentration of any such potentially toxic ingredients
at or below one half of the limit value, i.e., 0.25%. Because of assay uncertainty
and safety factor considerations, using more than about one half the limit value requires
considerably more testing to demonstrate conformance with confidence.
SUMMARY
[0011] Accordingly, one objective of the invention is to increase the stability of FDG and
hence the RCP of the product at the time of use. An additional objective is to increase
process efficiency by controlling radiolysis during FDG production. These need to
be accomplished at the same time that potentially toxic additives are kept within
practical safe limits.
[0012] Surprisingly, these objectives can be realized in an
18F-labeled FDG in water composition that incorporates ethanol in the final product
having a concentration in a range of a minimum effective stabilization amount up to
a practical pharmacopoeia limit. A minimum effective concentration is one that maintains
a 90% RCP for 12 hours or more. When the
18F activity concentration is about 10GBq/ml, it was found experimentally that the minimum
effective ethanol concentration is about 0.1% (v/v). Given these experimental results,
for a practical range of activity concentrations, it can be shown theoretically that
a linear approximation to the minimum effective ethanol concentration is about 0.01%
(v/v)/GBq/ml of
18F activity concentration.
[0013] The upper limit on the ethanol concentration is given by various country pharmacopoeia
limits. Currently, this is 0.5% (v/v) for ethanol in FDG solutions, but a reduced
upper limit of about 0.25% (v/v) is more practical to ensure regulatory compliance.
At least for
18F activity concentrations of about 10 GBq/ml or less, an ethanol concentration in
the range of about 0.1% to 0.25% (v/v) is an effective, safe stabilizer of FDG solutions.
[0014] When FDG is synthesized using a nucleophilic
18F fluorination step followed by a hydrolysis step, as described in more detail below,
ethanol may be added either to the NaOH hydrolyzing reagent solution, the dilution
water, the collection vial, an NaCl solution added to the collection vial, or to a
combination of these. When added to the NaOH solution, the stabilizing effect is achieved
as early as possible in the process. No mater when it is added, the amount of ethanol
should be adjusted to produce the concentrations in the final product described above.
DETAILED DESCRTFTION
[0015] The FDG production process described herein is based on an automated FDG synthesizer
supplied by Nuclear Interface GmbH (Muenster, Germany). The description of the system
and radiochemical synthesis is provided as an illustration only. Many suitable types
of apparatus and processes are used to synthesize FDG and have been well know for
some time. Synthesis of the FDG itself is not considered to be part of this invention
and only a basic description of a process is included here.
[0016] The synthesizer system includes a synthesis module control unit, chemical process
control unit and a computer. The control unit is located inside a lead shielded enclosure
and contains a number of reagent tubes, vials, and valves; a reaction and a product
collection vessel; and connections for purification columns and cartridges.
[0017] The usual synthesis of FDG is a two-step process consisting of two chemical reactions:
a nucleophilic
18F fluoridation followed by a hydrolysis step.
[0018] The fluorination step incorporates an
18F label into an organic precursor, 1,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-2-O-trifluoro-methanesulfonyl-β-D-mannopyanos
(mannose triflate). The substitution reaction is accomplished by combining a phase
transfer catalyst, with
18F fluoride extracted from an irradiated target material. The mixture is dried out
in a stream of inert gas. This dried mixture is added to a solution of the mannose
triflate in acetonitrile and this solution is heated and dried in a stream of inert
gas.
[0019] The hydrolysis step, as exemplified by a base-catalyzed hydrolysis of the acetyl
protecting groups, generates the free hydroxyl groups of the final drug product. A
predetermined amount of solution of NaOH in water is added as a hydrolyzing reagent
to the dry fluorinated mannose triflate and the resulting solution is heated to achieve
complete removal of acetyl groups.
[0020] To purify the resulting mixture and leave a solution of FDG in water, it is diluted
in a predetermined amount of water and filtered through purification cartridges.
[0021] This invention is not dependant on the details of the above steps and should apply
to any process that uses a nucleophilic fluorination step followed by a hydrolysis
step.
[0022] Four Working Examples:
To examine the affect of the addition of ethyl alcohol on the stability of FDG in
a water solution, it was produced as described above. Each run produced between 82
and 106 Bq (2.3 - 2.8 Ci) of FDG in 9 ml of water. Thus, the initial activity concentration,
just after the end of production, ranged from about 8-11 GBq/ml (263 - 320 mCi/ml).
[0023] In all experiments, the RCP was determined using a standard Thin Layer Chromatography
(TLC) method using 10 cm silica-coated glass plates supplied by Alltech (Deerfield,
Illinois). A 95:5 mixture of acetonitrile and water was used as a mobile phase and
a TLC plate scanter supplied by Bioscan (Washington, D.C.) was used to measure the
radioactivity distribution on the plate, In most cases, the sample size was less than
1 µℓ.
[0024] Ethanol concentrations were determined with Gas Chromatograph (GC) analysis using
an HP 5890 gas chromatograph equipped with 50 m capillary column, type DB WAX, supplied
by Alltech and a standard HP flame ionization detector (FID). The carrier gas was
helium at 4 -10 ml/min. The FID injector was split 1:50 and heated at 200 °C. The
column temperature was 50 - 200 °C with a 20 °C /min, ramp. The FID detector response
was calibrated using an external standard.
[0025] RCP was measured after storage times that ranged from 14 to 21 hours. It should be
noted, however, that most of the radiolysis takes place in the first 3-6 hours due
to the fact that this radioactivity concentration decreases exponentially over time
with a half-life of 1.82 hours. After 6 hours, only about 10% of the radioactivity
remains and is probably not sufficient to cause any significant decomposition of the
product.
Experiment 1: Ethanol added to the final FDG product.
[0026] In this experiment, the final product was prepared with an initial activity concentration
of 10.8 GBq/ml (292 mCi/ml). The product was split into 4 equal portions of 2 ml each
and labeled as samples 1-4 to which ethanol was added in varying amounts using a micro-syringe.
Samples were kept in tightly sealed vials identical to those used for storage and
delivery of FDG to customers, The RCP was measured at the time of production and after
14 hours. Ethanol concentrations in each of the samples were also measured using the
GC method described above. The Table 1 shows the results.
Table 1:
Sample# |
Ethanol (%) |
Initial RCP |
14 hour RCP |
1 |
0.05% |
97.2% |
87% |
2 |
0.24% |
" |
97% |
3 |
0.48% |
" |
96% |
4 |
1.07% |
" |
97% |
As Table 1 show, 0.05% is not a high enough concentration, to maintain an RCP that
meets USP requirements but, within experimental error, concentrations of 0.24% or
more suffered negligible degradation in RCP. Of course, 1.07% exceeds pharmacopoeia
limits and 0.48% may be too close.
Experiment 2: Ethanol added to the NaOH solution.
[0027] In this experiment, to simplify the manufacturing process and provide an added benefit
of stabilizing the intermediate product, ethanol was added to the NaOH hydrolyzing
reagent solution that was used in the hydrolysis step. It was added in an amount calculated
to result, after dilution with water, in about a 0.05% concentration in the final
product. In this experiment, the final product had an initial activity concentration
of about 11.8 GBq/ml (320 mCi/ml).
[0028] Samples 1, 2, and 3, each oC2 ml, were taken from the final product. To see if storage
conditions affected the results, samples 1 and 2 were stored in vials while sample
3 was stored in a syringe identical to those that are used to deliver FDG to users.
Each sample was analyzed at the end of a 15 hour waiting period using the TLC and
GC methods described above. Table 2 shows the results.
Table 2:
Sample# |
Ethanol (%) |
Initial RCP |
14 hour RCP |
1 |
0.04% |
98.9% |
89.7% |
2 |
0.04% |
" |
89.8% |
3 |
0.05% |
" |
87.8% |
[0029] The results indicate that, even when added to the NaOH solution, an ethanol concentration
of 0.04% - 0.05% is not enough. There was still enough loss of RCP so that the product
fails the USP limit of 90% RCP at the end of the storage period. Syringe storage appeared
to be the worst, but is probably within experimental error.
Experiment 3; Increased Ethanol added to the NaOH solution:
[0030] These experiments were identical to Experiment 2 except that ethanol added to the
NaOH solution was doubled resulting in an approximately 0.1% ethanol concentration
in the final product. Two different activity concentrations and storage times were
tried, For each, samples 1 and 2 were stored in vials, while samples 3 and 4 were
stored in syringes.
[0031] Table 3 shows the results for an initial activity concentration of 9.7GBq/ml (263
mCi/ml) after 21 hours.
Table 3:
Sample# |
Ethanol (%) |
Initial RCP |
21 hour RCP |
1 |
0.09% |
99.5% |
94.4% |
2 |
0.09% |
" |
94.7% |
3 |
0.11% |
" |
95.6% |
4 |
0.11 % |
" |
95.2% |
[0032] Table 4 shows the results for an initial activity concentration of 11.2GBq/ml (303
mCi/ml) after 15 hours.
Table 4:
Sample# |
Ethanol (%) |
Initial RCP |
15 hour RCP |
1 |
0.08% |
98% |
94.6% |
2 |
0.09% |
" |
94.2% |
3 |
0.10% |
" |
94.5% |
4 |
0.11% |
" |
95.1% |
[0033] Although there is still an appreciable loss of RCP, all samples met the USP limit
of 90% RCP at the end of the 1S & 21 hour storage period. The stabilizing effect of
a 0.1% ethanol concentration is therefore sufficient at FDG activity concentrations
at least up to 11.20Bq/ml (303 mCi/ml). An ethanol concentration of 0.1% is well below
the 0.5% limit admitted by European Pharmacopoeia and USP.
[0034] As expected, due to the reduced
18F decay and reduction in activity, the loss of RCP after 21 hours is not significantly
worse than after 1 hours. Storage method made little difference in the RCP.
[0035] In summary, for FDG solutions with an activity concentration of about 10 GBq/ml,
an ethanol concentration of at least about 0.1% (v/v) is an effective concentration
to stabilize the solution against radiolysis to yield a 90% RCP after 12 hours. While
the pharmacopoeia limits are higher than this, as a general rule, using the lowest
concentration of additives to a pharmaceutical is always desirable. As noted above,
lesser amounts help ensure that limits are not exceeded.
[0036] Therefore, for other activity concentrations, it would be useful to know the minimum
effective amount. Based on the experimental results described above that showed that
a 0.1%, ethanol concentration is effective for an activity concentration of 10 GBq/ml,
it should take only moderate effort for one skilled in the art to prepare different
practical activity concentrations of FDG and determine the required ethanol concentrations.
[0037] The effort can be considerably reduced, however, if one uses a concentration of ethanol
that is linearly proportional to the activity, i.e., 0.01% (v/v)/GBq/ml. This is because
the densities of both
18F-labeled FDG and ethanol molecules are low. There should be little interaction between
the molecules of each of these species with themselves in the water solution. For
10 GBq/ml, the density is about 10^14 FDG molecules/cc so that there is about 20,000
nm between them. For 0.1 % ethanol, the density is about 1.3 x 10^19 molecules/cc,
a spacing of about 500 nm in a water solution having a density of about 3 x 10^22
molecules/cc with an inter-molecular spacing of about 0.3 nm.
[0038] It is thought that the
18F positron emission produces a cascade of free radical species including O
*, OH
*, and others that react with the FDG, unless intercepted by ethanol molecules. Whether
true or not, it is clear that the major positron interaction is with water molecules.
This should be a liner function of the number of
18F emitters in solution. Assuming the ethanol has a protective effect, the amount required
should be linearly related to the number of free radicals and thus the
18F density.
[0039] While experimental confirmation is always desirable when dealing with injected radiophamiaceuticals,
the linear approximation to the least effective ethanol concentration should be reasonably
close, at least up to the Pharmacopoeia limits of 0.5% ethanol.
1. A radiopharmaceutical composition comprising:
18F isotope-labeled FDG in water having an activity concentration; and
ethanol with a final product concentration in the range of a minimum effective stabilization
amount up to a practical pharmacopoeia limit.
2. The composition according to claim 1 wherein the minimum effective ethanol concentration
is about 0.01% (v/v)/GBq/ml of 18F activity concentration.
3. The composition according to claim 1 wherein the minimum effective ethanol concentration
is about 0.1 % (v/v) for a 10GBq/ml 18F activity concentration.
4. The composition according to claims 1, 2, or 3 wherein the practical pharmacopoeia
limit for ethanol is 0.5% (v/v), more preferably about 0.25% (v/v).
5. The composition according to claim 1 wherein the ethanol concentration is in the range
of about 0.1% to 0.25% (v/v).
6. A process for stabilizing an 18F isotope-labeled FDG composition in water prepared with a nucleophilic 18F fluorination step followed by a hydrolysis step characterized in that an effective stabilization concentration of ethanol up to a practical pharmacopoeia
limit is produced in the final product during the process.
7. The process according to claim 6 wherein the ethanol is added to a hydrolyzing reagent
used during the hydrolysis step.
8. The process according to claims 7 or 8 wherein the minimum effective amount of ethanol
is about 0.01%(v/v)/GBq/ml of 18F activity concentration.
9. The composition according to claims 6, 7, or 8 wherein the practical pharmacopoeia
limit for ethanol is 0.5% (v/v), more preferably about 0.25% (v/v).
10. The radiopharmaceutical composition according to claims 6 or 7 wherein the ethanol
concentration is in the range of about 0.1 % to 0.25% (v/v).